Goddard’s work for the army continued after that break, as preserved in the same notebook:
April 22nd 1775—to supping and Breakfasting twelve Men and four oxen. £0:7:4Burbeck was the second-in-command of the artillery regiment.
24. to dining 4 Men
to entertaining teames and men that brought Canteens 0:2:0
May 2d, 1775.
Delivered to the Commasary at the Store in Camebridge
Sixteen Bushels of potatoes £1:8.9 [etc. etc.]
May 2 for Entertainment for Carter with ordinance stores 0:1:0
May 22. Began to be constant in service of the Province Myself.
June 2, 1775. to load of flour and porke from Watertown 0:7:0
2 to Carting Catrage paper from Brookline to Watertown 0:4:0
June 3 to Carting load canteens to Camebridge 0:6:0
June 5. for going to Camebridge with team for ammunition 0:5.0
June 27. 1775. to one days work of two hands and teams Drawing tree to the brestwork 0-14-0
July 7, 1775. To hand and team carting stons to the well in the fort at Brookline 0-6-0
1775. Octr. 3. To a days work carting together Bombs & Balls for Colo. [William] Burbeck To 1/2 day’s work removing Powder from my own house to ye Magazine in Jamaica Plain.
A different partial transcription appears in Nathaniel Goddard: A Boston Merchant, 1767-1853 (1906), by Henry G. Pickering. It includes “July 19, 1775. To cart and tent poles and Baggage [“Also gabeons”] for Colonel [Timothy] Danielson’s Rigement 0..14..0”.
On August 9, Gen. George Washington’s orders included: “Mr. John Goddard is appointed by the Commander-in-Chief, Wagon-Master General to the Army of the twelve United Colonies, and is to be obeyed as such.”
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